If we want less violent crime, we should hire more police. Although this approach might seem obvious, in fact many studies over the past few decades cast serious doubt over whether it really works. Now, two researchers at the University of California at Berkeley argue that their statistical analysis of 50 years of urban crime data shows that many cities could reduce crime, especially violent crime, by deploying more police.

Aaron Chalfin, a doctoral candidate in Public Policy, and law professor Justin McCrary presented a paper last week at the annual conference of the Association of Public Policy Analysis and Management in Baltimore scrutinizing levels of police staffing and crime rates in medium to large American cities between 1960 and 2010. Over that half-century, they estimate that each dollar spent on police yields approximately $1.60 in reduced victimization costs, suggesting that many U.S. cities employ too few police. Victimization costs attempt to estimate a dollar value for the various losses suffered by crime victims.

Although Chalfin and McCrary found that many cities deploy too few police, this was not true across the board. By comparing the costs and benefits of policing in various cities, for example, they found that every dollar spent on policing in Sunnyvale, California (pop.: 140,095) yields only 20 cents in crime reduction benefits, while every dollar spent on policing in Gary, Indiana (pop.: 80,294) yields $14 in such benefits. This appears to be an effect of the law of diminishing returns: Sunnyvale boasts low crime rates, while Gary has one of the nation’s highest crime rates.

The authors also confirm a controversial finding made by previous investigators that police reduce violent crime more than property crime.

Comments

anonymouse
4 years ago

How did the authors of the study distinguish the supposed effect of increased spending on police from the known effects of demographic change? It is not surprising that America's falling crime rate coincided with a sharp increase in US median age, as well
as generally decreasing poverty rates, during the atypical period, demographically speaking, chosen by the study's authors. The research seems to reach the startling conclusion that more spending on police pays off in high crime areas, not so much in low crime
areas. Wow.